|
Impressions: Published to commemorate
publisher Yurindo's 90th anniversary since its founding, this is a masterpiece
book showing the old days of Yokohama and other major areas in Kanagawa
Prefecture with 1,200 vintage postcards. If you are a history buff or
if you live in Yokohama and want to know what the place looked like
some 100 years ago, this book will give you a very good idea of what
it was like.
Yokohama was one of Japan's cradles of photography, where
photography was first introduced to Japan by foreigners after the port
was opened to foreign trade. Among foreign tourists, hand-painted picture
postcards and slides were in great demand as momentos to take or send
home. A great number were published, but a great number were also lost
in Japan due to natural disastors and the war. Museums and collectors
in Japan have since sought to acquire Japanese postcards and photographs
from the overseas descendants of Japan's early foreign tourists.
The book was compiled and edited by the Yokohama Archives
of History, and the reproduced postcards were taken from the Archives'
large collection (Neil Pedlar Collection) or borrowed from over twenty
private collectors and institutions. Almost half the book is devoted
to Yokohama-related postcards, and the remaining pages show postcards
of Kawasaki, Yokosuka, Miura, Isogo/Hayama, Kamakura, Fujisawa, Chigasaki,
Hiratsuka, Oiso, Odawara, Hakone, Manazuru, Yugawara, Ashigara, Isehara,
Atsugi, Tsukui, Sagamihara, and more.
The postcards only show landscape and street scenes. There
are no portrait-type postcards (geisha, etc.) which would warrant a
separate volume. Each postcard is captioned in Japanese, usually with
the place name and date. Although there are no English captions, many
of the postcards already have the place name in English printed on it.
Many of the postcards are also hand-colored.
The text section at the back of the book provides a lot
interesting historical information about Yokohama postcards. There is
a list of all the known publishers of postcards. And did you know that
the artists who hand-colored the postcards apparently worked at a pace
of 500 postcards per day, or one card per minute in an 8-hour working
day? The postcard printing technology of the time and how the Great
Kanto Earthquake in 1923 almost wiped out Yokohama's postcard, photo
studio, and printing industries are also explained. Fortunately, the
postcard industry continued. The earthquake's aftermath and rebuilding
of the city were photographed and published on postcards. They turned
out to be a valuable historical record of the city. The book also comes
with a poster-size maps of Yokohama and Kanagawa Prefecture in the early
20th century. (Reviewed by Philbert Ono)
700-5
|
| QUICK REVIEW
PROFILE |
 |
| What's Inside |
About the Artist |
Photo Evaluation |
| Genre:
Landscape |
Domestic acclaim: |
-- |
Artistic value: |
8.5 |
|
Photo:Text ratio: |
90:10 |
Dedication & effort: |
-- |
Cultural value: |
10 |
| Understanding
ease: 9 |
Vision & concept: |
-- |
Historical value: |
10 |
|
Overall impression: |
9.5 |
Int'l acclaim: |
-- |
Educational value: |
10 |
|
*Rating Scale 1-10: |
10-Outstanding, 9-Very good, 8-Good,
7-Average-Good, 6-Average, 5-Average-poor,
4-Poor, 3-Very poor, 2-Extremely poor, 1-No
value, --Not applicable |
|
Location/Setting: |
Yokohama and other places in Kanagawa.
|
|
Artist's Bio: |
|
|